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Hillside
United States
Related genres
Contemporary R&b
Contemporary R&B is a popular music genre that evolved from rhythm and blues and soul in the late 1970s, largely among African‑American musicians. It blends traditional R&B vocal stylings with elements of pop, funk, hip hop, and electronic music. The style is marked by soulful, passionate and often melismatic lead vocals; lush, smooth, frequently synthesized production; and a groove-first sensibility that can range from slow jams to club‑ready mid‑tempos. Since the 2010s, the incorporation of pop and electronic textures and production techniques has driven strands like electro‑R&B and helped expand the sound on global charts.
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Country
Country is a roots-based popular music from the rural American South that blends Anglo-Celtic ballad traditions with African American blues, gospel, and string-band dance music. It is characterized by narrative songwriting, plainspoken vocals with regional twang, and a palette of acoustic and electric instruments such as acoustic guitar, fiddle, banjo, pedal steel, and telecaster guitar. Rhythmically it favors two-step feels, train beats, shuffles, and waltzes, while harmony is largely diatonic (I–IV–V) with occasional country chromaticism and secondary dominants. Across a century, country has evolved through substyles like honky-tonk, the Nashville and Bakersfield sounds, outlaw country, neotraditionalist revivals, pop-country, and country-rap hybrids, but it consistently prioritizes storytelling about everyday life, love, work, faith, place, and identity.
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R&b
R&B (Rhythm and Blues) is a vocal- and groove-centered popular music tradition that blends blues tonality, jazz harmony, and gospel-inflected singing with a steady backbeat. It emphasizes expressive lead vocals, call-and-response, lush harmonies, and danceable rhythms. From its 1940s roots in African American communities to its later evolutions, R&B has continually absorbed and reshaped surrounding sounds—from jump blues and swing in the early days to soul, funk, hip hop, and electronic production in the contemporary era. Today, R&B ranges from intimate, slow-burning ballads to club-ready tracks, all tied together by a focus on feel, melody, and vocal performance.
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Western Swing
Western swing is a dance-band hybrid that fuses prewar country string-band music with the rhythmic drive and improvisational language of jazz and swing. Born in Texas and Oklahoma dance halls, it features fiddles and steel guitar up front, a strong rhythm section, and frequent horn parts, producing an exuberant, toe-tapping sound meant for two-steps, shuffles, and waltzes. Unlike most early country styles, western swing embraces extended jazz harmonies, walking bass lines, and instrumental solos, often over 12‑bar blues or 32‑bar AABA song forms. Amplified guitars, non‑pedal steel (later pedal steel), piano, and drums gave the music a powerful, urban polish while keeping a distinctly Western flavor in melodies, repertoire, and themes.
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Artists
Wonder, Stevie
Venna
Rush, Bobby
Neal, Kenny
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Melodding was created as a tribute to
Every Noise at Once
, which inspired us to help curious minds keep digging into music's ever-evolving genres.